Chapter 199 False Hope
Mated To An Enemy
âI expected more from you,â Fionaâs voice emanated her profound disappointment. As she held her boot firmly against Ashleighâs windpipe.
As she eased the pressure on her throat, allowing Ashleigh to breathe once more through gasping coughs, Fiona shook her head. Then, she removed her foot entirely and left Ashleigh lying in the dirt.
Ashleigh grabbed at her throat as her lungs began to settle down, no longer afraid they would never again feel the air filling them. She watched as Fiona walked away. She let her head fall back against the rocky floor with a heavy sigh.
Ashleigh lay there stewing in her frustration as the simulation room was converted back to its usual state.
The dirt and rocks below her slowly lost their shape and color and the hill she was on lowered itself until she was left lying on the flat surface of a white floor. The blue sky above her fell away in a fade until the white ceiling was revealed. One by one the trees and boulders disappeared.
Ashleigh sat up. Several rocks and trees remained and some of the blues in the sky hadnât entirely faded yet. She touched her temple; a soft beep signaled the disconnection of her VR Adapter. As she removed the small disc, all the remaining trees and rocks turned into large white shapes of varying sizes spread across the simulation room.
Three days had passed since Ashleigh and Clara had agreed that Clara would start investigating Alpha Cainâs office.
Three more failures in the training game.
Ashleigh was beginning to think she would never win.
She pulled herself up and went to the locker room. After a quick shower she got dressed and gathered her things.
In Winter she was the best, she had defeated all her other opponents and earned her place at the top. But here, even though she could handle most of what was thrown at her in simulations, she just felt weak.
âIs it too hard?â
Ashleigh turned to see Fiona standing near the entrance of the locker room..
âFionaâ¦â
âIs the game too hard?â Fiona asked again.
âNo,â Ashleigh replied.
âThen why do you keep losing?â Fiona smiled.
Ashleigh sighed.
âBecause I havenât won, yet.â
Fiona chuckled.
âIs it unfair?â Fiona asked.
âWell, you do have whatâ¦sixteen? On your side now?â Ashleigh replied.
âIs that unfair?â Fiona asked with a raised brow. âDuring the attack you took down a lot more than that on your own.â
Ashleigh clenched her jaw.
âI didnât say it was unfair,â she said. âI havenât given up.â
Ashleigh started to leave, but Fionaâs voice stopped her.
âAre you scared of the power you hold?â
âIâm not scared, but the berserkerâs rage isnât something that you use in a training game,â Ashleigh replied, keeping her tone calm, though she felt anything but.
âOh?â Fiona asked, crossing her arms. âTell me, how do you learn to use it, if you donât train with it.â
Ashleigh clenched her jaw again; she knew Fiona was intentionally misunderstanding her.
âOf course, we train it, but in a setting that is controlled and monitored by those who know how to handle a berserker who loses control.â
Fiona nodded.
âSo,â she said. âYou ARE afraid. Afraid of losing control, like you did the night of the attack.â
âI have a healthy respect for the power I hold,â Ashleigh replied through gritted teeth. âThat power is old and raw, it is not to be taken lightly, and it is not meant for games.â
âNo, youâre right, itâs not,â Fiona said. âBut, if you fear any part of you, be it your strongest or your weakest attribute, you are holding yourself back. Putting yourself at a disadvantage.â
Ashleigh could only take in a deep breath and remind herself that this was a Luna, she needed to keep her calm.
âThank you for the advice,â Ashleigh said, again moving to leave.
âCaleb hasnât come looking for you,â Fiona said. âYou havenât told him about the game.â
It was a statement, not a question.
âNo,â Ashleigh said.
âWhy not?â
Ashleigh sighed.
âBecause I donât want to get him involved.â
âIn what way?â Fiona asked.
âIn the way that makes it seem like I am trying to pit mother against son.â
âDo you have that much power over him?â
âNot by choice.â
Fiona laughed; she couldnât help it. Even if she had wanted to keep a firm and steady expression, the pure honesty that had come from Ashleighâs mouth was just too much not to react.
Ashleigh wanted to laugh, but she was too tired.
âDonât come tomorrow.â
Ashleighâs eyes widened and her stomach dropped. Had she failed to many times? Was Fiona telling her it was impossible?
âWhat I mean,â Fiona continued, âis, take a break.â
âA break?â Ashleigh asked, genuinely wondering if there was some kind of mental game being played here.
Fiona laughed again.
âYes, child, a break,â she said. âWe have played this game for ten days. A break is necessary. Let your body rest and spend some time with my son before he has a tantrum.â
Now Ashleigh could laugh, knowing that Fiona was right. The past three days she and Caleb had barely been able to say hello. She missed him, and she knew he missed her.
âHe is like his father in that way,â Fiona smiled, more to herself than Ashleigh. âCain was a busy man with more responsibility than was necessary. But he always made sure that I knew my place in his list of priorities was always first.â
Ashleigh wished she could have known Alpha Cain.
âAshleighâ¦â Fiona said softly. âMy concerns about you and your place in this pack, are entirely with you and your decisions. It has nothing to do with Cain, or Wyatt.â
Ashleigh swallowed.
âThat being said, not knowing the truth about what happened to him⦠it is a heavy sorrow that each wolf in this pack carries. Some blame you and all of Winter for it, others donât blame you, but wonât trust you either.â
âI know,â Ashleigh sighed.
Fiona nodded.
âThen find the answers, but do it quietly,â Fiona said.
âWhat?â Ashleigh looked up with eyes wide.
âPlease,â Fiona scoffed. âDo you think I wouldnât know if someone was in Cainâs office?â
Ashleigh rubbed her neck nervously.
âI guess there are ways that you and Caleb are similar as well,â Ashleigh sighed, thinking of how Caleb had also known about her investigation without her telling him. She looked up at Fiona awkwardly. âIâm sorry I didnât say anything, I wanted to find answers firstâ¦â
âIâm not upset you didnât tell me, itâs a good thing,â Fiona continued. âFalse hope is worse than any kind of torture. If you truly want to hurt someone, give them false hope, and then take it away just as they have started to believe in it.â
âThen⦠you want me to continue, but donât tell you about it?â
âAs far as I am concerned, all your going to find are some old research files and perhaps youâll get to know a great man a little better. But I donât believe you will find the answer to why heâs gone,â Fiona said.
âWhy not?â Ashleigh asked.
Fionaâs eyes darkened.
âBecause I believe, as I always have, that that answer lies with the Alpha of Autumn.â